Annex B |
|||||||||||
THE TREASURY BOARD SECRETARIAT | |||||||||||
1. Mandate and Role The Treasury Board is a committee of the Queens Privy Council for Canada. The Board consists of the President of the Treasury Board, the Minister of Finance, and five other Ministers appointed by the Governor in Council. The Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (TBS, or the Secretariat) is the administrative arm of the Treasury Board. It is headed by a SecretaryComptroller General, who reports to the President of the Treasury Board. The Secretariat has a mandate to support the Treasury Board as a committee of Ministers, to support the President and his office, and to fulfil the statutory responsibilities of a central agency within government. It does this by providing programs that carry out the legislated responsibilities of the Treasury Board. These responsibilities come from the broad authority of the Financial Administration Act, as well as from several other Acts: the Public Service Staff Relations Act; the Public Service Superannuation Act; the Official Languages Act; the Employment Equity Act; the Canadian Human Rights Act, the Federal Real Property Act; and the Public Service Employment Act. The responsibilities under the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act rest with the President of the Treasury Board as Minister. The role of TBS is to ensure continuous improvement in how the federal Government manages its resources to achieve its objectives. Its role includes providing advice, guidance and support to departments to help them meet their accountabilities. It also gives advice and support to Treasury Board Ministers in the development of a whole-government view, sets strategic directions and intervenes as necessary to achieve government objectives. The Secretariat is responsible for three separate programs: the Central Administration of the Public Service Program; Government Contingencies and Centrally Financed Programs; and the Employer Contributions to Insurance Plans Program. The Secretariats business lines and priorities are published in the TBS Report on Plans and Priorities. 2) Recource Planning and Expendeture Management The government uses the Expenditure Management System (EMS) to establish spending priorities. The Secretariat supports the Treasury Board by making recommendations on the allocation of approximately $50 billion in direct program expenditures encompassing three areas: operating and capital budgets of government departments and agencies; payments to dependent Crown corporations; and transfer payments to organizations, individuals and corporations. For example, the Secretariat:
Existing legislation provides ongoing spending authority for the remaining government expenditures, which include major transfer programs such as Employment Insurance, elderly benefits, provincial equalization payments, and the Canada Health and Social Transfer, as well as public debt charges.
b) Service and Innovation The new Sector of the Treasury Board Secretariat (TBS), Service & Innovation, came into being in May 1998 with the mandate to focus on government-wide approaches to improving services to Canadians. It provide leadership for government-wide initiatives, and, as it evolves, will become a major policy centre of TBS: a centre of expertise, a leader, and a catalyst for public sector innovation in the delivery of programs and services. The new structure includes all the key strategic elements needed to work out a government-wide strategy centred on citizens needs for improved service delivery, including:
The Sectors challenge will be to develop innovative and integrated approaches to service delivery, improve access to government services, reduce red tape, and strengthen accountability for performance in these areas. These priorities reflect the service priorities of Canadian citizens. An immediate challenge will be to assist the federal government to provide more convenient and integrated front-end services to Canadians, (a proposal for a "Service Canada" initiative), a priority strongly endorsed by Treasury Board Ministers in May 1998. c) Comptrollership The Treasury Board Secretariat has responsibility for traditional comptrollership functions such as financial, contract, material and property management, accounting, review, internal audit and program evaluation. The Secretariat is also responsible for implementing modern comptrollership across the Government. The Secretariat:
d) Information Technology and Information Management TBS provides leadership, co-ordination and broad direction in the use of information technology across government. Working in collaboration with departments, TBS facilitates enterprise-wide solutions to horizontal information technology and information management issues. It is from this vantage point that the TBS serves as technology strategist and expert advisor to Treasury Board Ministers and senior officials across government. The Secretariat focuses in three areas: infrastructure, service to the information
technology community, and innovation. The increasing reliance on information technology in
government, as well as the greater interdependence between government departments, and
even different levels of governments, requires cooperation and partnerships to work across
the system, clearing away obstacles to effective collaboration. With the Year 2000 looming
large, the top infrastructure priority at this time is solving the Year 2000 date problem.
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
|